
The Solitary House (called Tom-All-Alone’s in the UK) is a dark Victorian mystery that uses characters and plot points from two grand Victorian mysteries – The Woman in White by Wilkie Collins and Bleak House by Charles Dickens – to create its own riveting tale.
Charles Maddox is a young private investigator, an outspoken man who was fired from the police force after challenging an older and well-respected detective, Inspector Bucket. He’s scraping by, taking small jobs here and there, when he is summoned by a powerful attorney, Edward Tulkinghorn, to find the writer of some threatening letters sent to one of Tulkinghorn’s clients. With hopes of making important connections, Charles takes the job though he is wary of Tulkinghorn’s shady reputation. He quickly finds the letter writer, but he still becomes embroiled in a murderous and dangerous scheme when he realizes that Tulkinghorn has lied to him.
At the same time, Charles’s uncle, called Maddox, is rapidly degenerating into dementia so Charles moves in with him to help care for his admired uncle. Maddox was once a detective himself and taught Charles most of what he knows.
There is also a parallel plot line involving a young woman, Hester, who lives with her Guardian and several other young ladies in a peaceful country setting. At first, I was perplexed by this separate narrative, but Shepherd deftly connects the two stories together before the end of the novel.
There is a lot going on in this book. There are lots of little diversions that are all really interesting and, though hard to describe, they are not confusing to read about. I highly enjoyed the Victorian setting, the description of the gloomy, dirty and seedy London underworld and the glimpse into how the police operated in the 1850’s.
Fortunately, you don’t have to have read either The Woman in White or Bleak House to understand the plot or to appreciate the story. I have read The Woman in White, but did not catch very many of the references to its plot. I recognized many more details and characters from Bleak House, though I have only seen the tv adaptation!
Excluding Mary Stewart, this is the first suspense novel I’ve read in 2012 and it made me realize how much I like and miss the genre. Have you read any exceptional suspense novels lately?
Have you read The Suspicions of Mr Whicher – about the real-life Constance Kent murder case in 1860? Or if you prefer fictional mysteries, Sarah Smith’s trilogy, starting with The Vanished Child, which moves back & forth between the Victorian & Edwardian years.
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I have never read Mr Whicher, though it’s been on my radar for a long time now. The Sarah Smith trilogy sounds right up my alley!
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I second Mr Whicher, there’s Mary Stewart’s The Ivy Tree too. I’m planning to read Assignment in Brittany by Helen MacInnes soon. It was published in 1942 and was required reading for British agents during the war so it should be full of suspense.
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Very interesting about the MacInnes book! I now want to read it too. It must be very true to life if they used it for training purposes.
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Cool, I’ve got a proof of this somewhere but I haven’t read it yet, I might bump it up the list now after reading your review!
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I went to the launch of this book know lynne through twitter looking forward to reading this one my self I have read bleak house many years ago ,all the best stu
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How lucky to have been able to go to the book launch! It is a great book and I look forward to reading more by her.
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